Sun.Star Pampanga

Japan’s new emperor remorseful in 1st war anniversar­y speech

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T74th anniversar­y of Japan’s surrender.

Looking nervous and his voice slightly trembling, Naruhito pledged to reflect on the wartime past and expressed hope that the tragedy should never be repeated. Empress Masako, in a gray suit and a hat, quietly stood by his side, her head slightly lowered.

Naruhito has promised to follow in the footsteps of his father, who committed his career to making amends for a war fought in the name of Hirohito — the current emperor’s grandfathe­r. Though Akihito has avoided a direct apology, he has subtly stepped up his expression­s of regret over the past years in carefully scripted statements on the war.

In sharp contrast, Prime Minister Shinzo

Abe did not apologize or acknowledg­e Japanese wartime atrocities in Asia and elsewhere.

Instead, he made a long list of damage inflicted on Japan and its people, including the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, massive fire bombings of Tokyo and the fierce battle of Okinawa.

The emperor’s words have taken on greater importance and caught attention as Abe has increasing­ly sought to whitewash Japan’s troubled and embarrassi­ng past since taking office in December 2012. Abe has since stopped acknowledg­ing Japan’s wartime hostilitie­s in his Aug. 15 speech, ending a tradition that past prime ministers had handed down since the 1995 apology by a Socialist leader Tomiichi Murayama.

Abe made no reference to Japan’s ongoing dispute with South Korea over trade and compensati­on demands over brutal treatment of Korean laborers during Japanese colonizati­on of the Korean Peninsula in 1910-1945.

He pledged that Japan will reflect on lessons from history and will not repeat the devastatio­n of war, while joining internatio­nal efforts to tackle world pr obl em s.

Abe, however, stayed away from a Tokyo shrine that honors convicted war criminals among the war dead, and instead sent a religious offering, a gesture to avoid angering China and South Korea, which consider the Yasukuni shrine as a symbol of Japan’s militarism.

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